Welcome! I am a contemplative thinker and photographer from Colorado. In this blog, you'll discover photographs that I've taken on my hiking and backpacking trips, mostly in the American West. I've paired these with my favorite inspirational and philosophical quotes - literary passages that emphasize the innate spirituality of the natural world. I hope you enjoy them!

If you'd like to purchase photo-quote greeting cards, please go to www.NaturePhoto-QuoteCards.com .


In the Spirit of Wildness,

Stephen Hatch
Fort Collins, Colorado

P.S. There's a label index at the bottom of the blog.

Showing posts with label William of St. Thierry. Show all posts
Showing posts with label William of St. Thierry. Show all posts

Sunday, January 11, 2015

In solitude, we realize that bliss is always mutual!


Today as I hiked through the beauty of a Wyoming winter landscape freshened by a lively breeze, I realized that in solitude I am never alone. For Nature's silence and solitude elicit an awareness of the fact that contentment - otherwise known as bliss or ananda - is always MUTUAL. Abhishiktananda, a French Benedictine monk whose birth name was Henri Le Saux, realized that "Man does not possess this ananda; rather he is possessed by it." "There cannot be a solitary bliss, any more than there can be solitary being or solitary self-awareness." For when we experience bliss while in solitude, it GRASPS and holds our awareness because it is alive with PRESENCE. As a medieval Cistercian monk named William of St. Thierry once wrote:"What you can grasp gives you knowledge. But what grasps you makes you wise."




 In silence, we sense that we are gripped by the loving Gaze of God. But this experience is non-dual by virtue of the fact that our being-grasped by Divine Love is a reality that is always and forever emptied out into OUR experience. In other words, the fact that we are grasped and held in the loving gaze of God is an insight that only occurs only through OUR spiritual perception. In fact, if we were to follow the magnetic pull of that gaze endlessly within or endlessly toward the horizon of Being, we would NEVER come to its source - that is, to the One who is gazing. And yet - and here is the amazing part - this grasping within God's gaze still occurs, but only through OUR perception of it!





Photos: (Top) Rose Hips in the snow; (Middle) Lichen; (Bottom) The sun sets through dead Lodgepole Pine trees. All three photos were taken at Vedauwoo Recreation Area, Medicine Bow National Forest, WY, on January 10, 2015

Tuesday, November 25, 2014

A Christian Contemplative Answer to the Question: "Who Am I"?



The other day, I watched a documentary about Deepak Chopra, filmed by his son. One of the points made by Chopra throughout the movie was the idea that the spiritual quest is inherently tied to the question: "Who am I?" The quest for the true self as an unchanging, unborn and undying reality seems to be at the crux of many Eastern paths, including the one Deepak Chopra is following.

Yesterday, hiking through the snow and mist up in the nearby mountains, I realized that for me, the true self is actually quite elusive and mysterious. As a Christian contemplative, I've found that "kenosis" - the Greek word for self-emptying - is perhaps the most important answer I can give to the question "Who am I?" The path on which I've been lead involves the practice of identifying with a spacious mind and heart, one in which both God - the transcendent source - and myself are LOST together in self-emptying bliss. Out of this vastness - a spaciousness whose other name is LOVE - all beings and all phenomena come popping out during each millisecond of time, like echoes of an unspoken Divine Word arising out of nowhere. Thus, the reality of the "true self" - here, at least - is more a mysterious space where all of creation can occur, than a reality in and of itself.

The path of Christian Mysticism also emphasizes another realization; namely, that the true self is innately RELATIONAL. In an interesting dialogue between Robert Aitken Roshi and Brother David Steindl-Rast (a Benedictine monk), Steindl-Rast quotes William of St. Thierry, who says: "What you can grasp gives you knowledge. What grasps YOU makes you wise." Aitken agrees, and goes on to quote Dogen Zenji, who exclaimed: "That the self advances and confirms the ten thousand things is called delusion. That the ten thousand things advance and confirm the self is called enlightenment." When we try to grasp at (or avoid) things, we are subconsciously trying to shore up the seeming solidity of the false self. However, when we allow those same things to grasp US (or to playfully push us away!) - that is, to grasp our awareness - we start to become who we are truly meant to be: a transparent "eye" through which all things can come to know and appreciate their own majesty and beauty.




That is definitely the case with my photography. It is not a matter of ME deciding to photograph this or that. Rather, those things - whether it be a mountain peeriing out of the mist, a snow-bedecked evergreen, or a wide-open sky - begin to grasp ahold of me (and my camera) in order to express and know their own beauty and goodness through my perception and appreciation! As Thomas Berry says: "The human is called to be the mind and heart of the universe." Here again, the true self is found in being emptied out into the world, where it serves as a vehicle for the Cosmos - and for the Creator and Mother Earth - to know and appreciate themselves.

There is, of course, a place for the ego in all of this. Although the goal is for the ego - i.e., the solid, bounded sense of self - to become translucent to the Greater Whole (to become "a transparent eyeball," as Emerson famously put it), it is NEEDED to help discern the unique ways in which WE are meant to serve this seeing. In other words, each of us is called to become a different lens onto the Whole. Each of us is meant to focus that "eye" on a different aspect of the cosmos. For me, that usually involves Western landscapes, contemplative insights, and an understanding of the various personality types we human beings manifest during our time here on Earth. For another person, the transparent lens may, for example, focus on those who are sick, in jail, oppressed, or poor. For another, the lens may focus on scientific or mechanical pursuits.

The temptation, of course, is to allow OTHERS to tell us how we should focus our gifts. The function of a strong ego is to form a boundary that says "No" to the intrusive expectations of others (and to our own superficial desires), and "Yes" to the true inner promptings that lead us into the ways in which we are meant to focus our own unique gifts. In fact, every contemplative I've ever known possesses a strong ego. They closely guard their space, possess intense discipline, and don't easily let others - or the society - intrude on their inner territory. But the ultimate goal, of course, is for this boundary-setting ego to become transparent to a vision on the Greater Whole.




May each of us discover the unique ways in which WE are called to serve as the vast, self-emptying love out of which all creation emerges, and as the one-of-a-kind lens through which the cosmos can become aware of its own great goodness and beauty!

Photos: (Top) Limber Pine trunk, with rock spires fading in and out of the mist, Emerald Lake; (Middle) Lodgepole Pine bedecked in snow; (Bottom) A rock, Bear Lake, and Hallett Peak. All three photos were taken in Rocky Mountain National Park (CO) on November 24, 2014

Wednesday, September 3, 2014

Allowing the Divine in Nature to Affirm our Innermost Soul


In the redrock canyon country of the American Southwest, a fascinating phenomenon occurs involving sunlight and the two canyon walls facing one another. When the rays of the sun shine directly on one of the walls, the color becomes rather washed-out, a fact that is well-known to anyone trying to photograph the scene. However - and here is the important point - when the light bounces from that wall and reflects off the OPPOSITE cliff, it begins to glow in the most beautiful shades of red or gold.



This past weekend while hiking at Zion, it occurred to me that this phenomenon is a direct embodiment of an important spiritual principle.  Whenever we focus our attention on an externally-perceived object of beauty - present either in the natural or human world - the light of our adoration immediately is reflected back to us and begins to manifest OUR OWN inner beauty;  that is, of our "soul."  In other words, the perception of external beauty makes us feel beautiful WITHIN.  Here, the external object of beauty corresponds to the sunlit canyon wall, and our own inner soul corresponds to the opposite canyon wall indirectly reflecting the light so beautifully. This phenomenon occurs, I believe, because there is a subjectivity inhabiting the externally-perceived beauty (in this case, the canyon rock) that EMPTIES ITSELF in love and ricochets our compliment right back to us.  Here, the more we attempt to praise the beauty of Nature, the more OUR OWN inner beauty begins to glow, in the process activating the power of our imagination and our own divine radiance.



Perhaps this is one way to interpret 13th century Zen master Dogen's famous statement: "That the self advances and confirms the ten thousand things is called delusion.  That the ten thousand things advance and confirm the self is enlightenment."  Or, as the medieval Cistercian monk William of St. Thierry once put it: "What you can grasp gives you knowledge.  What grasps you makes you wise."  In the case of the redrock canyon, we begin by trying to grasp the beauty of the rock as though it were some sort of object, and instead end up BEING-GRASPED and affirmed by the divine presence inhabiting that beautiful red or golden hue.  As a consequence, we find ourselves suddenly coming alive to our own natural radiance, and to the inward power of imagination that enables us, for example,  to discover a sacred feminine presence inhabiting the rock and wooing us with her immense beauty.  How amazing!

Photos: (Top)  Joanne hiking in Echo Canyon; (Middle) The trail to Observation Point; (Bottom) The Narrows of the Virgin River; all three photos taken in Zion National Park, UT; August 30 and 31, 2014

Friday, January 31, 2014

Love is an intellect that gives us knowledge of one another.


Currently, I'm teaching a class on Contemplative Christianity at Naropa University in Boulder. Naropa was founded by a Tibetan Buddhist lama back in the '70s, and it is a fascinating place to do interreligious dialogue. In any case, one of the things I appreciate about Christian Mysticism is its emphasis on love as a means of knowledge. A 12th century Cistercian monk named William of St. Thierry understood that "Love is an intellect that gives us knowledge of God" - and, we might add, of the Earth and of one another. Truly, we cannot claim to know another person until we've practiced divine love as a means of uncovering the sparks of sacredness that lie hidden deep within them. We certainly hope that others will do similarly with us

Photo: Rosy Paintbrush blooms, with Medicine Bow Peak in the background; Snowy Range, WY; June 29, 2013

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Thursday, August 16, 2012

The soul in its happiness finds itself standing midway in the Embrace and the Kiss of Father and Son.



"The soul in its happiness finds itself standing midway in the Embrace and the Kiss of Father and Son . . . That person somehow finds himself in their midst; that is, in the Holy Spirit.  And he is united to God by that charity whereby the Father and Son are one.  The soul is made holy in Him who is the holiness of both."

William of St. Thierry, a 12th century Cistercian monk

Photo: Subalpine Lupine, Reflection Lake, and Mount Rainier; Mt. Rainier National Park, WA, July 25, 2012

Thursday, January 12, 2012

The Spiritual Understanding - Rather Than Grasping - is Itself Grasped by Wisdom


"By the natural understanding the soul grasps the object which it penetrates; but by the spiritual understanding, instead of grasping, it is itself grasped."

William of St. Thierry, 12th century Cistercian monk

Photo: Last light penetrates a hillside in the Medicine Bow Mountains, CO, January 6, 2012

Tuesday, October 11, 2011

Reason and Love are Contemplation's Two Eyes


"Contemplation has two eyes, reason and love.  These two are of great mutual assistance because love gives life to reason and reason gives light to love.  Often when these two eyes faithfully cooperate, they become one.  In the contemplation of God, where love is chiefly operative, reason passes into love and is transformed into a certain spiritual and divine understanding, which transcends and absorbs all reason . . . [Here,] love is an intellect that gives us knowledge of God."

William of St. Thierry, a 12th century Cistercian monk


"The one who loves You grasps you.  The more one loves, the more one grasps, because You Yourself are love."

Aelred of Rievaulx, another 12th century Cistercian monk


Photo: Aspen "eyes," Oh-Be-Joyful Pass Trail, near Crested Butte, CO, October 1, 2011